Sex differences in common childhood infections in Taiwan.

Int J Infect Dis

Institute of Occupational Medicine and Industrial Hygiene, National Taiwan University College of Public Health, Taipei, Taiwan; Department of Public Health, National Taiwan University College of Public Health, Taipei, Taiwan; Department of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, National Taiwan University College of Medicine and Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.

Published: October 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study followed 278,000 Taiwanese children from 3 months to 18 years to compare healthcare visit patterns for infections between boys and girls from 2000 to 2012.
  • - Overall, boys showed a slightly higher rate of healthcare visits for infections than girls before age 6, except for herpangina, while patterns for other infections like respiratory and conjunctivitis were similar across genders.
  • - Notably, boys had a higher incidence of kidney infections during infancy, but after that period, girls experienced more urinary tract infections, highlighting significant age-related sex differences in infection rates.

Article Abstract

Sex differences in childhood infections are commonly reported in case-only studies. In this population-based study of 278000 Taiwanese children followed from 3 months to 18 years of age during the period 2000-2012, age-trajectories of monthly numbers of all-cause healthcare visits and monthly rates of infection-specific healthcare visits were compared between boys and girls. For all-cause healthcare visits and for healthcare visits related to conjunctivitis, respiratory tract infections, enteritis, hand, foot, and mouth disease, and herpangina, there was good resemblance of age trajectories between boys and girls. Despite this resemblance, there was evidence of a slightly higher rate in boys than in girls under age 6 years (i.e., a male tendency, or male-to-female ratio >1.0) across all diagnoses except herpangina. For urinary tract infection, where an age-specific sex difference is well reported in case-only studies, this population-based study confirmed that there was a much higher rate of kidney infection among boys than among girls during infancy, and a higher rate of kidney and bladder infection among girls than among boys after this period. The age-specific sex difference in urinary tract infections was so strong that the age trajectories in boys and girls were qualitatively different. This report confirms previously reported sex differences in other countries, whilst placing this in the context of age dynamics in childhood infection.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2018.08.014DOI Listing

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